This is why I keep pointing out that it's important to ask "where
is the name used". I don't think there is or was any suggestion
in these threads, at the meeting, nor in the wiki, that the splash
screen will/should include techno jargon terminology. Just
YYYY-MM will definitely suffice.

In email exchanges we're likely to use "SimRel YYYY-MM" or
"simrel YYYY-MM" rather than just "YYYY-MM" as if a date were a
noun that means more than just a date.

I think URLs like the following are where we see something more
than just YYYY-MM, again to associate some noun in order to give
the date meaning:

So in the splash screen, of course the product brand will give
sufficient context to make YYYY-MM meaningful all by itself. So in
the end, we don't actually need to invent a new brand around the
name of each release because we have no important place to use that
brand name in the first place. The slash screen was the only place
of any real public, end-user significance where the train name was
used, and that we've eliminated.

Cheers,
Ed

On 03.05.2018 17:20, Daniel Megert
wrote:

Maybe I did not
have
enough coffee, but I can't remember that we decided to use

Eclipse SimRel YYYY-MM

I thought we
just
drop everything but the date and let the splash screen
communicated what
it is. As mentioned "SimRel" is stupid because most users have
no clue what this means. If at all, we'd have to use the full
name.